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Pediatric and Adult Transplantation • ORGANS • TISSUES Heart Lung (single or double) Heart & Lung Kidney Pancreas Kidney & Pancreas Intestine Bone Marrow Stem Cell Cornea Heart valves Tendons Skin Bone The Numbers - Completed http://www.unos.org The Numbers 30,000 25,000 20,000 Total Deceased Living 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 1988 1990 1995 2000 2005 http://www.unos.org The Numbers – By Organ ORGAN Feb 2006 Heart 38,878 Lung (single or double) 13,866 Heart & Lung Kidney Pancreas 903 218,381 4,813 Kidney & Pancreas 13,309 Liver 75,532 http://www.unos.org The Numbers – Still Waiting ORGAN Heart Lung (single or double) Heart & Lung Kidney As of Feb 2006 3,023 3,122 150 69,752 Pancreas 1,772 Kidney & Pancreas 2,585 Liver 17,734 http://www.unos.org The Numbers – The Wait ORGAN Heart Days 206+22 Lung (single or double) 704+30 Heart & Lung 889+120 Kidney 1099+30 Pancreas 179+35 Kidney & Pancreas 442+35 Liver 517+35 http://www.optn.org The Numbers – Die Waiting ORGAN This yr. 2/16/04 Heart 465 Lung (single or double) 386 Heart & Lung Kidney 15 2,980 Pancreas 28 Kidney & Pancreas 181 Liver 1,506 http://www.optn.org Survival Rates (%) 100 95 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 50 Heart Lung HL Kidney Pancreas SPK Liver 1-Year 3-Year http://www.optn.org Organ Shortage • less than half of the nation's donor pool is being utilized • rate of organ donation varies: age, racial, and demographic groups - the family of a donor <50 years old is 5x more likely to consent to organ donation than a family of a donor >60 years old - African Americans donate organs half as frequently as Caucasians (Asians, Hispanic) • differences attributed to several factors: - way families are approached and informed about organ donation clergy members or social workers are involved in these discussions, higher donation rates - distrust of the organ donation system Indiana Donor Choice Law • supports your donation decision – legal directive • Previously, family consent was required for organ donation • Now, if 18+ and have signed driver's license, donor card, or other legal document indicating that you want to be a donor, qualified medical personnel have the legal authority to carry out your last wish • <18yrs old, can still be a donor, but parents or guardian will be asked for consent *House Enrolled Act 1628, Amended IC 29-2-16-2.5, effective July, 2001. Cadaver Donor Process • UNOS maintains a centralized computer network linking all organ procurement organizations & transplant centers. • When a deceased organ donor is identified, a transplant coordinator from an organ procurement organization accesses UNOS system • Each patient in the "pool" is matched by the computer against the donor characteristics • A ranked list of patients for each organ that is procured from that donor is generated • Factors affecting ranking: tissue match, blood type, length of time on the waiting list, immune status and the distance between the potential recipient and the donor • The organ is offered to the transplant team of the first person on the list: Often, top patient will not get the organ: must be compatible with donor, must be healthy enough to undergo major surgery, and willing to be transplanted immediately. http://www.unos.org Live Donation Living donor transplants are a viable alternative for patients in need of new organs: • 1954, 23-yr-old identical twins - ktx - Donor went on to live an active, normal life, died from causes unrelated to the transplant • Related: parents, children, siblings, and other relatives donate to family members • Unrelated donors (ie. spouses or close friends) may also donate their organs if a match • Living "stranger-to-stranger" donation is new & growing source of donors – ethics? http://www.unos.org Organ Types for Living Donation • Single kidney most frequent type of living organ donation • Liver donate segments of the liver- ability to regenerates & regains full function • Lung donate lobes of the lung- lung lobes do not regenerate • Pancreas donate a portion of the pancreas - the pancreas does not regenerate, but usually no problems w/ reduced function ------------------------------• Domino transplant http://www.unos.org Qualifications for Living Donors • physically fit, in good general health, & free from high blood pressure, diabetes, cancer, kidney disease, and heart disease • usually 18-60 yrs of age • gender & race are not factors in determining a successful match • living donor must first undergo a blood test to determine blood type compatibility with the recipient. Blood Type Compatibility Chart Recipient O A B AB = = = = Donor O A or O B or O A, B, AB, or O http://www.unos.org Qualifications for Living Donors • Medical history & physical examination • Tissue Typing: blood draw for tissue typing of the WBCs • Crossmatching: blood test to check if react to the donor organ "positive," = incompatible, "negative" tx proceeds routinely performed for kidney and pancreas transplants • Antibody Screen: Donor’s WBCs and recipient’s serum are mixed to see if there are antibodies in the recipient that react with the antigens of the donor • Urine Tests: kidney donation, urine samples are collected for 24 hours to assess the donor's kidney function • X-rays & ECG: screen the donor for heart and lung disease • Arteriogram: screen for CVD • Psychiatric and/or psychological evaluation: donor & recip. http://www.unos.org Kidney Transplant Kidney • Donor kidney ureter is attached directly to the bladder & is connected to the recipient's blood vessels Lung Transplant Lung - uni/bilateral C under armpit - remove rib/s Lung • Orthotopic - single, double or heart-lung • living-donor lobar lung tx -extends lives for doublelung or heart-lung tx -lower lobe of one lung (2 living donors -related or not) transplanted into the recipient -complex & performed rarely Heart Transplant Heart Transplant Orthotopic vs Heterotopic Heart - Orthotopic Heterotopic -"backup battery“ • blood flow diverted from • recipient’s heart not removed heart to heart-lung -chambers & blood vessels of bypass machine & heart both hearts stopped with chemical • very rarely used (d-heart solution need extra help to fx in • front part of heart cut recipient) away & back walls of left -recipient’s body > donor's & right atria stay -donor's heart functions • donor heart (minus its poorly back walls) grafted into -pulmonary hypertension remaining part heart Pancreas Transplant Pancreas (PA/SPK) • diseased pancreas & the duodenum not removed • donor pancreas & duodenum inserted in right lower portion of patient's abdomen & attached to their blood vessels and intestine Islet Transplantation • local anaesthetic & 60 mins. -islets injected into liver & secrete insulin directly into circulatory system to control blood sugars. Liver Transplant Liver - orthotopic • Removal of the patient's liver, leaving portions of major blood vessels in place • donor liver will then be inserted and attached to these blood vessels and to the patient's bile ducts Heterotopic – • provides an auxiliary liver – fewer technical difficulties • won't need lifetime immunosuppressant therapy • worst-case scenario, liver doesn't come back & donor liver functions in its place just like a regular transplant • results discouraging rarely used Liver – live donation Medical/Surgical Concerns • • • • • • • • • Primary non-function (early) Bleeding, thrombosis (early) Infection - bacterial, viral, fungal Wound infections Medication toxicities Rejection Anastomotic leaks Other: electrolyte imbalance Immunosuppressive side effects - Diabetes - Hypertension - Hyperlipidemia - Increased bone resorption (osteoporosis) Organ Specific Med/Surg Concerns Liver • • • • • Biliary leaks, strictures, obstructions Vascular problems: HAT, HVT Ascites Recurrent Disease (HBV, HCV) Malignanacies - imaging, labs Organ Specific Med/Surg Concerns Kidney/Pancreas • delayed graft function • kidney imaging: renal scan, renal arteriogram Heart • echo for left ventricular function (global graft atherosclerosis) Lung • bronchoscopy • PFTs (FVC, FEV1, F25/75) Rejection • • • • Fever or not Tenderness or not Elevated labs (CBC & organ specific) Biopsy Rejection Liver – fever, ↑ labs, bx Transaminase aspartate aminotransferase (AST) alanine aminotransferease (ALT) -elevation reflects hepatocyte injury • Cholestatic enzymes alkaline phosphatase (ALK), bilirubin (tot. bili) -reflect secretion of bile • Coagulopathy prothrombin time (PT) Rejection Kidney - tenderness, acidic urine and/or ↓urine output, labs, bx • Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) waste product excreted by kidney – elevated with rejection but can be skewed by high protein intake • Creatinine (Cr) waste product excreted by kidney – elevated with rejection, dehydration, and with elevated levels of drugs that are toxic to kidney • Electrolytes potassium, sodium, chloride, bicarbonate, calcium, phosphorus Rejection Heart • reduced exercise tolerance and/or SOB • transjugular biopsy • echo for left ventricular function (global graft atherosclerosis) • Labs: CBC (WBC) Lung • • • • dyspnea bronchoscopy with biopsy PFTs (FVC, FEV1, F25/75) Labs: CBC (WBC Post Transplant Medications For Transplant: For Side Effects: • • • • • • • • • • • Immunosuppressants Antifungals Antivirals Antibiotics Anti ulcers Digestant Antihypertensives Antihyperlipidemics Glucose regulators Antiosteoporotics Antidepressants PLUS other medications for pre-existing conditions Current Immunosuppressants • cyclosporin (ie.) Sandimmune, Neoral, Gengraf - inhibit cytokine synthesis & release – early t-cell activation tacrolimus (ie.) Prograf - 10-200x more potent than cyclosporin – same mechanism • azathioprine (ie.) Imuran - inhibits lymphocyte proliferation • mycophenolate mofetil (ie.) Cellcept - inhibits lymphocyte (T & B cells) proliferation – more specific,<toxicity • sirolimus (ie.) Rapamune -inhibits cytokine signaling transduction – late t-cell act. & maturation • corticosteroid (ie.)prednisone Newest Immunosuppressants • daclizumab (ie.) Zenapax - monoclonal antibodies that inhibit antigen recognition • basiliximab (ie.) Simulect - monoclonal for injection only • anti-thymocyte globulin (rabbit) (ie.) Thymoglobulin -polyclonal antibodies that inhibit antigen recognition • muromonab –CD3 (ie.) OKT3 - monoclonal, depletes blood of CD3+ t-cells - leads to restoration of allograft function Exercise for the Organ Transplant Recipient Peak Oxygen Uptakes in Adult PRE Transplant Recipients 35 30 25 VO2 (ml/kg/min) 20 15 10 5 0 Heart D-Lung Heart & Lung Kidney Liver Age-Pred. 40-49yo Improvements with Transplantation Reasons for low functioning following transplantation • Residual effects of pre-transplant disease • Physical deconditioning / bedrest • Maintenance of sedentary behavior following transplant Transplant Rehab Intervention Project 1996 U.S. Transplant Games Fitness Testing N = 128 • 76 kidney • 16 liver • 19 heart • 6 lung ( 4 single; 2 double) • 8 kidney/pancreas ( 1 pancreas only) • 4 bone marrow Painter, Transplantation. 64 (12): 1795, 1997 Transplant Games: cardiorespiratory fitness 150 40 p=.0001 30 20 % age-predicted VO2 Peak VO2 (ml/kg/min) 50 active p=.000 inactive 100 50 10 0 0 Painter, Transplantation. 64 (12): 1795, 1997 Transplant Games: body composition 40 active 40 Skinfold % fat inactive 30 30 p=.05 20 BMI p=.02 20 10 10 0 0 Painter, Transplantation. 64 (12): 1795, 1997 Transplant Games Survey: SF-36 Scales Scores 120 active p=.05 inactive Scale Scores 100 p=.08 p=.07 80 p=.05 p=.03 60 40 20 0 PF RP BP GH VT SF RE MH Painter, Transplantation. 64 (12): 1795, 1997 Transplantation and Exercise Heart Transplant & Exercise Exercise BL 9.2 ml/kg/min 6-mth 13.6 ml/kg/min Control BL 10.4 ml/kg/min 6-mth 12.3 ml/kg/min 49% improvement 18% improvement n= 27 post heart transplant recipients 6 mth aerobic exercise training – rehab. Kobashigawa, N Engl J Med. 340: 272, 1999. Heart & Lung Transplant & Exercise n=10 60 -41 days post tx 50 & followed for 18 mths 40 -supervised increm. 30 ex. to BID 30 min. 20 sessions 10 -cont. walking (70% max) 0 -inspiratory muscle training -only 10 completed rehab. VO2peak Admit DC 6-mth 12-mth 18-mth Ambrosino N. Eur Respir J., 9:108, 1996. Lung Transplant & Exercise Exercise Baseline = 18.4 ml/kg/min 6-wks 20.3 ml/kg/min 18% improvement n = 9 - 1yr post lung tx 6 wks aerobic endurance training, cycle ergometer 30 – 60% of HRR; 60 min increased to 120 min Stielbellehner L. Chest 1998; 113:906-12 Liver Transplant & Exercise n = 17, 1mth post OLT step, cycle ergometry 2x/week, 1hr – intensity individualized Relative change (%) Liver Transplantation & Exercise 200 180 160 140 80 120 100 VO2max (l/min) KE conc (Nm) 0 Pre OLT 3 Months post OLT 6 12 Beyer, Liver Transplantation 5(4): 301, 1999. Kidney Transplant & Exercise Cardiorespiratory Fitness (VO2max) PEAK VO2 (ml/Kg/min) 45 40 exercise 35 usual care 30 * 25 20 15 BASELINE 6 MONTHS 12 MONTHS Kidney-Transplant Rehab Intervention Project Painter, Transplantation, 74(1): 42, 2002. Kidney Transplant & Exercise % Age - Predicted VO2 max % AGE-PREDICTED PEAK VO2 120 exercise 100 usual care ** 80 60 40 BASELINE 6 MONTHS 12 MONTHS Kidney-Transplant Rehab Intervention Project Painter, Transplantation, 74(1): 42, 2002. Kidney Transplant & Exercise Quadriceps Muscle Strength 60 Extension Peak Torque/ Body Weight exercise usual care 50 ** 40 30 20 BASELINE 6 MONTHS 12 MONTHS Kidney-Transplant Rehab Intervention Project Painter, Transplantation, 74(1): 42, 2002. Goals of Exercise • • • • • • • Prevent physical deconditioning Optimize/maintain physical functioning Reduce symptoms of disease Optimize medical therapies Optimize surgical interventions Optimize quality of life Reduce risk of secondary cardiovascular events CV Risk Reduces risk of: • dying from heart disease • developing diabetes • developing hypertension Helps reduce and control: • hypertension • hypercholesterolemia • obesity • hyperglycemia Exercise Testing • lots of recent clinical data on patient • may not – know the purpose - performance based testing • standard exercise testing protocols • ECG and BP monitoring • same test termination criteria as ACSM Fitness Testing Strength maximal voluntary contraction (1 RM), isokinetic work and peak torque Muscular endurance maximal number of repetitions Flexibility sit and reach distances, goniometry (ROM) Cardiorespiratory endurance maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max), submaximal bike test, step test Fitness Testing Body Composition hydrostatic weighting, skinfolds, dual energy x-ray absorptiometry --------------------------------------------------------------- Motor Skill Performance (neuromuscular) gait analysis, balance times, reaction time Functional Performance sit to stand, 6-minute walk Cardiovascular Activity Mode: utilizes large muscle groups in a continuous, repetitive motion (ing’s) Frequency: 3-5x/week - 2x/day Duration: 2x10 mins -45 mins. consecutive Intensity: tolerate, moderate exertion, “somewhat hard” Progression: duration, frequency and intensity are adjusted according to patient’s status and goals Muscular Strengthening • Select a weight that can be lifted 10x without excessive muscular fatigue • 1 set of 10 repetitions for each muscle group • When reps. = 15 then wt by 1-2 lbs. • 3 days per week * May need to start with Theraband™ Special Considerations • Deconditioning • - muscle atrophy • • Side effects of • immunosuppressants • - diabetes - hypertension - hyperlipidemia - muscle wasting - reduced bone mineral density Rejection Infection Wound Management Procedures - biopsy, JP drains • Electrolyte imbalance – ECG & muscle cramping Heart Transplant PRECAUTIONS • No nervous Intervention • Rejection Heart Transplant PRECAUTIONS Higher Resting Slower Response Heart Rate Lower Max Longer Recovery Exercise Time Heart Transplant PRECAUTIONS • No nervous Intervention • Cannot Feel Angina Incidence (%) Transplant Atherosclerosis 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 5 Fyfe, A.I., Canadian Journal of Cardiology 8:509-519, 1992 Transplant Atherosclerosis • As early as three months • Not isolated to heart • Renal Arteries of Kidney Fyfe, A.I., Canadian Journal of Cardiology 8:509-519, 1992 Transplant Atherosclerosis • Diffuse • All Epicardial & Intramural arteries • Intimal inflitrate • Lacking calcification • Without marked disruption of the internal elastic lamina Fyfe, A.I., Canadian Journal of Cardiology 8:509-519, 1992 Transplant Atherosclerosis Fyfe, A.I., Canadian Journal of Cardiology 8:509-519, 1992 Transplant Atherosclerosis 70 Survival (%) 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 5 Fyfe, A.I., Canadian Journal of Cardiology 8:509-519, 1992 Transplant Atherosclerosis • Treatment is re-transplantation • 25% of organs Fyfe, A.I., Canadian Journal of Cardiology 8:509-519, 1992 Organ Specific Special Considerations Lung • Lose cough reflex -pulmonary hygiene (self-induce, postural drainage) • • • • • • Bronchial reactivity Pneumothorax Infectious exacerbations Most present with ↓↓ bmd or fxs O2 tank= security Dyspnea scale Organ Specific Special Considerations Liver • • • • Incisional hernia Low back pain Bile leaks, strictures, obstruction Recurrent disease - HCV: IFN treatment, fatigue, anemia Organ Specific Special Considerations Kidney/Pancreas • Diabetic - neuropathy blunted HR response